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    You are at:Home » City’s biggest Black Church prepares for 100 days of prayer — and presidential politics
    Religion

    City’s biggest Black Church prepares for 100 days of prayer — and presidential politics

    July 31, 20246 Mins Read1 Views
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    The Rev. Amos C. Brown, shown Sunday at Third Baptist Church, says he was inspired by the candidacy of Vice President Kamala Harris to kick off “100 Days of Prayer.” / Source:Helynn Ospina for The Standard
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    By George Kelly

    The Rev. Amos C. Brown of Third Baptist Church of San Francisco said he was inspired by a former congregant to kick off his nationwide “100 Days of Prayer.”

    Congregants attend worship service Sunday at Third Baptist Church of San Francisco. /Source: Helynn Ospina for The Standard

    This was no ordinary parishioner. It was the likely Democratic nominee for president, Vice President Kamala Harris.

    At Third Baptist’s 10 a.m. worship service Sunday, Brown invited people of all faiths to pray for civility, responsible behavior and peace during the last 100 days before the 2024 presidential election. But it was clear who was getting his vote.

     “We are going to be praying, first for these United States of America,” Brown said from the pulpit. “America needs prayer. Pray for every person that purports to be a governmental official.”

    The day before, the reverend had set the stage for the sermon by saying, “The nation faces a stark choice with its future in the balance. People of faith and humanity are rightly concerned about both the conduct of the campaign and what will become of the nation if we elect leaders who fail to see the humanity in all our neighbors.”

    The 100 Days of Prayer movement emerged from discussions between Harris and interfaith leaders, Brown said, adding that it aims to “bring us together to oppose those who would seek public office to benefit themselves, rather than to serve the needs of the nation.”

    Third Baptist Church members on Sunday shared positive views of President Joe Biden’s decision to forgo reelection and endorse Harris as his replacement atop of the Democratic ticket.

    The Rev. Beverley Phillips, who led an altar prayer and offered benediction, recalled seeing Harris campaign for San Francisco district attorney in 2002 by handing out leaflets outside a Costco store.

    The Rev. Beverly Phillpis says Harris “understands how to communicate with people.” /Source: Helynn Ospina For The Standard

    “She has the training, the education, the background, and she understands how to communicate with people,” Phillips said.

    Congregants attend worship services Sunday at Third Baptist Church. / Source: Helynn Ospina for The Standard

    Timothy French, who joined Third Baptist Church a month ago, said he didn’t know a great deal about the upcoming election. But he drew on his own experience being raised by a single mother and seeing the challenges she faced.

    “It’d be nice seeing Ms. Harris become the president,” French said. “I believe this would be a better world when women are in power and given the right to do what needs to be done.”

    Cheryl Thornton, co-founder of the city’s Harriet Tubman African American Democratic Club, said she attended Biden’s speech this month at the NAACP’s national convention in Las Vegas.

    She applauded Biden’s decision to step aside, saying the shift upon Harris’ arrival “has been much more positive.”

    “We need to save democracy here in our country,” congregant Cheryl Thornton says of her support for Harris./ Source: Helynn Ospina for The Standard

    “We need to save democracy here in our country, because it feels like with the other candidate, President Trump, that we are headed to a fascist government, and we need to maintain democracy and inclusion for all.”

     

    Congregants attend worship services Sunday at Third Baptist Church. / Source: Helynn Ospina for The Standard

    Hanna Gebremariam called Biden’s decision to step down “rational” and compared it not only to George Washington’s rejection of a third term in office but to some African leaders’ retention of leader-ship roles.

    “Some people, they just want to go forever, but what Biden did was wise, and he’s gonna be a symbol,” Gebremariam said. “In African countries, they sit in that chair until they die. So I hope African leaders will learn from him. What Biden told the world is that people, when they age, need to step down.”

    Gebremariam, who arrived in the U.S. from East Africa a decade ago, called the country her “God-given mother, even though America has a painful legacy with our brothers: Black people, Black men and women — they paved the way for us to live and enjoy it.”

    She brightened when she spoke of her late cousin Solomon Jones, whom she said used to work with Harris at the San Francisco district attorney’s office.

    Harris arrives at her campaign headquarters July 22 in Wilmington, Del. /Source: Erin Schaff/NY Times./ Getty Images/POOL

    “I am an American citizen,” Gebremariam said. “I’m ready to vote for Kamala Harris.”

    Harris arrives at her campaign headquarters July 22 in Wilmington, Del. | Source:Erin Schaff/NY Times/Getty Images/POOL

    “I’m ready to vote for Kamala Harris,” says congregant Hanna Gebremariam./ Source: Helynn Ospina for The Standard

    “I’m ready to vote for Kamala Harris,” says congregant Hanna Gebremariam. | Source:Helynn Ospina for The Standard

    Brown said he hopes his prayer initiative will encourage reflection and historical awareness.

    “Engaging in prayer and being mindful of the lessons of history will help us to avoid repeating the worst mistakes of the past,” he said, cautioning against “fascism, rule by dictator and inhumanity that has plagued so many other nations.”

    Brown told The Standard that he first heard about the Biden decision while at the pulpit July 21. “I was just about to take my text from a verse in the biblical book of Hebrews,” he said, on “a great cloud of witnesses” to preach about faithful men and women whose lives and deaths leave track records of positive action for others to follow.

    For Brown, those people include not only Frederick Douglass, Harriet Tubman, Mary Church Terrell and Mary McLeod Bethune but ministers and academics like Benjamin Elijah Mays and Mordecai Wyatt Johnson.

    The list also includes Biden, whom Brown has known since 1991, when he joined other Black Baptist leaders in a panel presentation before the then-senator to denounce Clarence Thomas’ placement on the Supreme Court to fill the seat of Justice Thurgood Marshall.

    “Mr. Biden’s a smart man; he’s a statesperson,” Brown said. “He’s solid; he’s a decent person. He’s not stuck on himself. I love him; I appreciate him. He will go around in history as a profile in courage. He put his country and the Democratic Party above his personal aspirations. When you keep that before the world, this is where you do it; this is how you ought to behave. So, we’ll see what happens. But even if we don’t win, it won’t be because we did not state the case and we did not try. The people are energized.”

    Brown also called for prayer for Trump.

    “I wasn’t going to go out there and name-call or point fingers,” he said after his sermon. “I said what I said because he has to be a very troubled person.”

    Brown noted how former Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black and former presidential candidate George Wallace changed late in their public lives. Perhaps Trump can, too, he suggested.

    “Whether or not he is redeemable,” he said, “depends on how he plays the game of life.”

     

    adding that it aims to “bring us together to oppose those who would seek public office to benefit themselves Brown said rather than to serve the needs of the nation.” The 100 Days of Prayer movement emerged from discussions between Harris and interfaith leaders
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    Carma Henry

    Carma Lynn Henry Westside Gazette Newspaper 545 N.W. 7th Terrace, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33311 Office: (954) 525-1489 Fax: (954) 525-1861

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    This College Chaplain Fills The Pews By Teaching, Not Preaching Lawrence Lockett Jr., Morgan State University chaplain. Credit: Lawrence Lockett Jr. via LinkedIn By REV. DOROTHY S. BOULWARE (Source: Amsterdam News) It’s understandable for parents of strong faith to worry about the spiritual lives of their children who’ve gone away to college. After all, it’s easy for a young person, perhaps on their own for the first time, to suc-cumb to the temptations of partying late on Saturday night and sleeping in on Sunday morning. But Minister Lawrence Lockett Jr., chaplain at Morgan State University in Baltimore, is packing them into the pews most Sundays. He is engaging them in lively ways during the week. And students are joining the choir, accompanying worship on various instruments, and serving as readers and leaders throughout the service. It is by the grace of God for sure, but also by the loving service of Lockett, who’s beginning his second year as the school’s director of chapel. He has grown his flock from the 25 or so students who showed up at his first services to more than 200 each Sunday. Sometimes, it’s standing room only. “We’ve been trying to figure out what to do next because on Easter Sunday we had 342 people, and some were standing in the back,” he said. Word In Black talked to Lockett about the secrets of his success: how his adjustment of Sunday ser-vices got people into the pews, why his philosophy for guiding students on their spiritual journey centers on independent thought, and how his “Spin the Block” initiative is shaking things up on campus. The in-terview has been edited for length and clarity. Word in Black: The first thing we want to know is, how do you get so many young people to chapel every Sunday?. Lawrence Lockett: Well, first of all, I changed the time of service from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. I realized a lot of the students like to sleep in late. It gives them time to do whatever they need to do. I’m sure many of them still like to party hearty over the weekend. So they have a good chance just to kind of refocus, recali-brate, get themselves lunch, and then come over to the chapel for service. When I started in November, maybe 20-25 students came, but now it’s over 200 that come every Sun-day, and it’s pretty cool. So now we’re repositioning ourselves to go after the freshman class this year. If we have the same success as last year, there’s definitely not going to be any room. Word in Black: Tell me about pastoring on a college campus. Lawrence Lockett: Morgan actually started as a biblical institute, so the Christian traditions have al-ways been here. As a pastor or shepherd, I’m walking students through their questions, not always just trying to preach answers to them. It’s about being vulnerable. I tell them I was in their same position, just trying to figure it out. And it’s not me just trying to give them answers. Having been there helps me really walk with them and anchor them in the storm of life that’s going to come. I want them to understand that their soul really matters. A lot of students focus on mental health, but they really need to focus on spiritual health as well. It should be one and the same. So I’ve been trying to preach that, if anything, spiritual health is just as important as your mental health. But we do encour-age the use of the counseling center, for sure, if there is a mental health crisis. WIB: What does Monday through Friday look like for you? LL: Mondays, we are usually off because of Sundays. On Tuesdays, we have Bible studies, so I’ll host a Bible study at noon along with my colleagues that work in the chapel. And then, I’m teaching a class called Hip-hop and the Gospel on Tuesdays at 2:30 p.m., dealing with mixing culture and religion. On Wednesdays, we do something called “breath and balance,” which is just a meditative type of pro-gram with breathing exercises as stress relievers. We work with the School of Nutrition Science and the food resource center so that the students get a nice free meal and practice breathing exercises and meth-ods to feel good about the day. For Thursdays, we started something called the mosaic, in which we have different campus ministers gather in small groups, just like a mosaic painting. So the students who come on Sundays then get plugged into small groups on Thursdays. And on Fridays at 1 p.m., we do prayer for Muslims.. We have an imam lecture and then lead in corporate prayer. It’s a good mix. WIB: What is “Spend a Block?” Didn’t you receive an award for it? LL: That started last year. We just basically do services outside: outside the residence halls, in the quad, wherever it may be. Honestly, worship on a college campus looks different than it did 20 or 30 years ago. Students want something real and authentic, something they can gravitate to, and something that’s convenient. So when we’re outside, people are like, “What’s all the noise outside? What’s all the music?” Then they come outside, and there are chairs, so they grab one and sit and enjoy the service. We come to them. They don’t have to come to us. At the very beginning of the semester, we do services outside the four resi-dence halls. And that kind of gives us a steamroll into homecoming week. And we’ve seen a lot of success because of that. WIB: What should I expect when I arrive for Sunday service? LL: You’re gonna see a lot of involvement with students. I’ve learned that students like to feel invested, and they want to participate in what’s going on. They don’t want to be told by adults what they should and shouldn’t do. So when you go to the service, you’ll see our praise team full of students. You’ll see a choir full of students. You’ll see students reading scripture. You’ll see students giving testimonies. And then I’ll come in and give a sermon, or I’ll have a guest friend or a guest preacher come in to do the sermon. But you’re gonna see a lot of student involvement, and I think that also assisted with a lot of the growth be-cause when they see fellow students, they understand they’re just like me, and if they can do it, I can do it. WIB: What about musicians and choir? LL: The musicians are also students. They say, “Hey, I love to play. I wanna use my gifts in some way, shape, or form.” And they’ll ask whether or not there’s a spot for them. And we say absolutely. And there is a chapel choir. Some of the members are also members of the university choir. WIB: What is the “next” you see for the chapel? LL: I want the students to know God, find freedom, discover purpose, and make a difference. The chapel really is the heartbeat of the campus, and I want students to know more about where faith, hope, and belonging really stem from. 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    September 24, 2025
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